Why You Might Need A Tooth Taken Out
June 1, 2016White Fillings Are Great For Teeth And Smiles
June 6, 2016The pain in your jaw is absolutely unbearable.
You can’t speak, you can’t eat, you can’t yawn without feeling the pain pulsing through your jaw into your face and neck.
You can barely work, and when you are home, the pain interferes with the time that you want to spend with your family.
You want to figure out what is causing your pain, and more importantly, you want it to stop.
Sunrise Dental may be able to help, particularly if you have been grinding your teeth. Our dentists help patients throughout North Carolina at our offices in Raleigh, Cary, Chapel Hill, and Durham.
The Nightly Grind
If you habitually clench or grind your teeth together, this is called bruxism. It’s quite common for this to occur when people are sleeping, and it may be the source of the pains that you have been feeling when you are awake.
Teeth grinding is sometimes a response to stress. We all have stress at times. If you are more prone to feel stressed or your stress has increased due to issues with family or at work, then grinding your teeth could be one way your body is trying to deal with the situations.
As dental professionals, we don’t think this is good for you in the long-term.
If you sleep eight hours a night and spend any significant portion of that time grinding your teeth into one another, then you will understand the symptoms of the problem. These include headaches, earaches, jaw and facial pain, and neck and shoulder pains. Your teeth grinding also may affect the mobility of your jaw. You may not be able to open or close your jaw completely at times.
We will try to explain why. An average human bite can generate 200 to 250 pounds of force. That’s more than enough to eat the foods that we eat on a regular basis.
People who grind their teeth have been measured producing 500 pounds of pressure and more. That’s pressure that is being absorbed one way or another by temporomandibular joint (TMJ) and the surrounding muscle tissue that controls the movement of your jaw.
Over the long-term, teeth grinding can lead to other problems, like:
- Wearing down the protective enamel on the outside of your teeth.
- Cause teeth, dental crowns, and bridges to crack or chip.
- Increased facial sensitivity.
- Teeth that feel loose or painful.